Three PhD students ponder…is Twitter worth it? Part IV: Extra credit

In this fourth and final post in our series (here are links to parts one, two, and three), we’ve rounded up some further reading that may be of interest to you. And because Twitter is at its best when it’s about community, I’d love to learn from useful resources that you have drawn upon. If you have any relevant links, please send them through! Tweet me (@jacquietran) and I’ll add them to the list (with due credit, of course).

Thanks to everyone who has taken the time to read / tweet about / share our blog series on “Is Twitter Worth It?” To be honest, I wasn’t sure how well the series would be received – I wondered about “preaching to the choir” by sharing this info through social media networks – so it’s pleasing to see that the posts have already been viewed over 650 times, collectively! Here’s a selection of tweets we’ve received in response to our posts:

[tweet https://twitter.com/catspyjamasnz/status/481618561501523968]

[tweet https://twitter.com/llionroberts86/status/476525050401525760]

[tweet https://twitter.com/GeoffMinett/status/481419424331608065]

Finally, thanks again to Nathan Lee (@NathanAndyLee) and Chris Brandner (@ChrisBrandner) for giving up their time and sharing their insights throughout this blog series!

Curated content

Infographics

[tweet https://twitter.com/Drew_Lab/status/332491931512877056]

Edit (03/07/2014): thanks to Sheree Bekker (@shereebekker, PhD student from Federation University) for the following resources from the 2014 IOC World Conference on Prevention of Injury & Illness in Sport: